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Prevailing approaches to school closure treat closure as a discrete administrative act, equate schools with their facilities, and assess impacts in terms of isolated outcomes. This paper challenges these assumptions by applying Dynamic Systems Theory (DST) to school closure policy and research. We argue that schools function as adaptive ecosystems embedded within broader networks of relations… more →
The Child Care and Development Fund (CCDF) subsidizes child care costs for families with low-incomes. Reimbursements for cost-subsidized care are paid to child care providers but are extremely low compared with market rates and actual cost of care. We examine how the 2014 congressional reauthorization of CCDF, which recommended states increase subsidy reimbursement rates to the 75th percentile… more →
This study examines within-class age differences as a novel determinant of adolescents’ dietary behaviors, isolating it from confounders such as absolute age, season of birth, and country-specific school entry rules. Using a multi-country dataset of over 600,000 European students, we find that younger students within a class exhibit poorer dietary habits. Since confounders are controlled for,… more →
We investigate the distribution of students across classrooms in North Carolina elementary schools. While tracking is ubiquitous and well-documented in secondary education, limited evidence exists regarding cross-classroom clustering in elementary schools and its consequences. Consistent with qualitative evidence suggesting that educators seek to create demographically balanced classrooms, we… more →
There is a growing consensus on the need to measure teaching effectiveness using multiple instruments. Yet, guidance on how to achieve reliable ratings derives largely from formal research in high-income countries. We study the reliability of classroom observations and student surveys conducted by practitioners in a middle-income country. Both instruments can achieve relatively high… more →
We use administrative data to measure sibling spillovers on academic performance before and after the introduction of Free Secondary Education (FSE) in Tanzania. Prior to FSE, students whose older siblings narrowly passed the secondary school entrance exam were less likely to go to secondary school themselves; with FSE, the effect became positive. A triple-differences analysis, using… more →
When: Thursday, November 13 at 3:00pm ET
Where: Zoom (click here to register)
Join us for our next EdWorkingPapers Webinar, where we’ll bring timely, policy-relevant research to life through live conversation. Our fall session on Thursday, November 13 at 3:00pm ET will focus on long-term trends in student enrollment and achievement. Hear directly from the authors as they share insights and discuss implications for research and policy, and come with your questions!

James H. Wyckoff, presenting Puzzling Over Declining Academic Achievement

Abigail Francis, presenting School Enrollment Shifts Five Years After the Pandemic

Joshua Goodman, presenting School Enrollment Shifts Five Years After the Pandemic

Susanna Loeb, EdWorkingPapers Review Board member, facilitating the conversation and Q&A